Tiempo Climate NewswatchDesertification and Global Warming: |
||||||||||
Action point
Jim Salinger describes his priority for action on global warming. You can play the low bandwidth or the high bandwidth version Featured sitesPlan B, from the Earth Policy Institute, details how to rescue a planet under stress by cutting carbon emissions 80 per cent by 2020. The e-newsletter from the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change Secretariat provides a comprehensive overview of major news and announcements regarding the climate negotiations. The OzoneAction Education Pack provides primary school teachers with practical, hands-on and entertaining curricula material to educate their students about ozone depletion. The Youth Climate Pledge is a collaborative plan of action that young people can sign on to and get others to commit to. And finally,The United Nations Paint for the Planet exhibition features paintings by child artists on the theme of climate change. About NewswatchTiempo Climate Newswatch is a weekly on-line magazine with news, features and comment on global warming, climate change, sea-level rise and development issues. It is edited by Mick Kelly and Sarah Granich and maintained by Mick Kelly and Mike Salmon. The cartoons are created by Lawrence Moore. The news stories carried by Newswatch are updated weekly. Comment, features, interviews and other sections of the magazine are updated on a weekly to monthly basis. Newswatch automatically scans a number of news sites once an hour, searching for a set of keyphrases. The raw news feed can be accessed in standard or PDA format. Part of the Tiempo Climate Cyberlibrary, Tiempo Climate Newswatch is hosted by the Climatic Research Unit, School of Environmental Sciences, University of East Anglia. The Tiempo Climate Cyberlibrary is a co-production of the Stockholm Environment Institute and the International Institute for Environment and Development, sponsored by the Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency. While every effort is made to ensure that information on this site, and on other sites that are referenced here, is accurate, no liability for loss or damage resulting from use of this information can be accepted. |
For years now, climate change has been recognized as a major environmental issue and one that involves several stakeholders. Consumers, private companies, politicians and researchers are actively engaged in studying the processes of how to reduce emissions and developing innovative policies and mitigation programmes. The people who may be the most affected by the problem and the ones who will have to adapt are those in the South who live on less than one dollar a day. National Adaptation Programmes of Action are, therefore, being planned and developed in an effort to address this situation. Synergies and the mainstreaming of the issues of climate change with other programmes dealing with development and environment would considerably enhance the efficiency of planned activities. One of the most alarming processes of global concern, meanwhile, is desertification or land degradation. The recent major report of the Millennium Ecosystem Assessment entitled Ecosystems and Human Well-Being underlines the fact that desertification is one of the greatest environmental challenges and a major impediment to meeting basic human needs in drylands. Desertification is due to direct and indirect human-induced factors, but it is also due to climatic variations, including increasing droughts and flash floods or reduced freshwater availability as a result of global warming. Desertification is a truly global phenomenon with serious economic and social implications. The urgent need to combat desertification was given recognition by the international community at the 1992 Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. The United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification (UNCCD) was adopted two years later as an international legally binding instrument to address the issue. Entering into force in 1996, the Convention now counts 191 Parties, the largest membership of the Rio Conventions. While the intervening years have seen progress in placing desertification on the international agenda, the issue still deserves more recognition. A fact that ought to shake people out of their inertia is the inextricable link between desertification and poverty. In the Millennium Ecosystem Assessment, desertification was cited as "potentially the most threatening ecosystem change impacting the livelihoods of the poor." Among the two billion people living in drylands, 90 per cent are in developing countries. Since it is clearly not a one-dimensional environmental issue, the fight against desertification requires a multi-layered approach, which integrates the environmental aspect into a broader socio-economic framework, primarily within the development sphere. The UNCCD stands at the helm of this process, having as its main tool the National Action Programmes to combat desertification, which evaluate the nature and intensity of the problem in the respective country and identify the necessary action to be taken.
The link between climate change and desertification is of major significance. According to the Millennium Ecosystem Assessment, dryland soils contain over a quarter of all of the organic carbon stores in the world as well as nearly all inorganic carbon. Due to the increased emissions and reduced carbon sink caused by desertification and related loss of vegetation, it is estimated that about four per cent of total global emissions are generated in drylands. Therefore, restoration and improvement of dryland conditions could have a major impact on global climate change patterns. Climate change in turn also affects desertification, although the exact links are not sufficiently understood and may vary significantly from one region to another. Due to the increase of energy in the atmosphere, however, it is expected that the number of extreme events such as droughts and heavy rains will increase slightly, potentially having a dramatic impact on already weakened soils. Freshwater availability may also be reduced, due to phenomena such as increased solubility and salt-water intrusions induced by the rise in sea levels. Some studies go even further. Mike Wallace, co-author of a recently launched study on the shift in jets streams, said that, "if they move another two to three degrees poleward during this century, very dry areas such as the Sahara Desert could nudge further towards the poles, perhaps by a few hundred miles," thereby forcing millions of people either to migrate or to adapt to the changing circumstances. It is clear, therefore, that synergies between the UNCCD National Action Programmes, which are building bridges between development and environment policies, on the one hand and the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change National Adaptation Programmes of Action on the other present a unique opportunity to take a new step towards comprehensive policy instruments. This would allow the development of innovative poverty reduction strategies, while strengthening the adaptation capacities of the poorest and fighting climate change through carbon sequestration and emission reductions.
The United Nations General Assembly designated 2006 the International Year of Deserts and Desertification (IYDD). The IYDD represents a unique opportunity to raise awareness amongst the broadest possible audience and to galvanize policy makers and the public at large into action. It's a chance which must be seized, given the staggeringly sobering statistics that belie the complacency with which the issue of desertification is often treated. It is also a unique chance to develop synergies with other partners in the context of global change. In other words, collective action as an appropriate response to collective responsibility. This is the only way forward in seeking to put the world firmly on a path of development that is sustainable and to address two of the most important environmental challenges that we face in the 21st century - desertification and climate change. The international workshop Climate and Land Degradation will be held December 11-15th 2006 in Arusha, Tanzania, as part of the IYDD celebrations. The meeting is organized by the World Meteorological Organisation in collaboration with the UNCCD and will be a great opportunity to move forward. Further information On the Web |
Bright Ideas
Offsetting air travel with atmosfair buys solar mirrors that provide energy for the preparation of thousands of meals daily in India
Dow Building Solutions has prepared a short information sheet covering the construction of green roofs
The fabric in Asics Commitment range of sportswear is woven from bamboo yarn
SolidNav has developed electric propulsion units for small water craft and sailboats
WATT, a nightclub in Rotterdam, the Netherlands, has a dancefloor that generates electricity and toilets that flush with rainwater
During play, the Energy Merry-go-round generates electricity that is transferred to a battery and 220V invertor for use in the classroom
Waste Management provides home recycling kits for compact fluorescent bulbs, batteries and electronics
Norwegian music festivals, Canal Street and Hove, have joined the Climate Neutral Network
The PlayPump water system doubles as a water pump and a merry-go-round for children
Honda is leasing the hydrogen-powered fuel cell FCX Clarity to private individuals in southern California
TIDE, in southern India, markets energy-efficient stoves that reduce fuelwood use by as much as 30 per cent
Curitiba's BioCity Program (0.3Mb download) aims to halt the rapid rate at which cities develop and reduce biodiversity loss Tiempo Climate Newswatch
|
||||||||